“recce” — the reck which a reckless is lacking reck verb rek recked, past participle; recked, past tense; recking, present participle; recks, 3rd person singular present Pay heed to something - ye reck not of lands or goods - little recking where she was wandering - he recks not Syria, recks not Britain It is of importance - what recks it? Synonyms verb: mind, care, heed Also,
Which is correct: rack my brain or wrack my brain? Which is the correct usage: quot;rack my brain quot; or quot;wrack my brain quot;? Google turned up pages with conflicting recommendations One argument is that to quot;rack a brain quot; comes
The wrought wreaked havoc misunderstanding Here's an Ngram chart that tracks the frequency in Google Books search results of "wrought havoc" (blue line) versus "wreaked havoc" versus "worked havoc" (green line) for the period 1800–2005:
idiom requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I posted this on reddit, and got some really close answers like “Jumping in the deep end” or “Going in blind” which are close to what I was meaning to say cause it supposed to sound like going to recklessly commit yourself into something while being ignorant of the things you’re about to encount